Si It tTBtTJSni!B ETSnt TtTERDAT 12ij7orph Gates & Soil. 'snse of datv to his constituents would coin pel film to depart INwthe wi well acquainrea witn me scntimcnis or nis districtj and'Wontd truly repreaent tTiem, ma not admit nj question. Mr m. saiu. rantr. DdTiAnA txiHinnum t one half in -advance T?q?ho da. knewhe honorable member; by his : er Kufenucr,tlv.1eive notice-of their VTialrtOjhavcf fi,.mnptti ; r ? mtrnni Tanil fhft t.rlln- f't; hTr character of hisWirfpes wai equal-to any 4itScounteiiian. , i J, ..jexigeticy, ti the perlormance, of every quinatle, the sport of the wit, tVe bttti of Uic wag, and the. scorn of honest citr.ens liutU counteniiandeJ. ' t Ifot cxeeeSetc; ifee?i tines, will be iiifiorted three (ftmis tot a Douar": find twenty-fire ccnM tor each suhftcqart pubHcationi those of greater length, in Vfoporttviu It" llie nuiaber of inscrtibns be not ; 'thadcpd.on them, they will jbc .continued jntil or-- I i tiered oat, and charged accoidmgly. i . DKBATEYiN TllE SENATK. duty. jWe shall see what hiv course vvill be and if 1 am nt greatly mistaken, said Mr. Mi it tviinfally vindicate all that I have ?aicl on t'H subject. So urm, sauliMr. M. tsray belief, that the state ol niblic aentiment in the west ern part of TjJorth -Carolina is as I have renresented it, ! that I du not believe a tittle of conflicting testimony can be pro- uwceu irom a source mat mav oe regard- v l r 7 ed is wholly inpartial.' I know, sir, that if you look to those who live and make The Senate, baVin?, onrnrotionof Mr. profit by the offices, the contract or the Manstum," resumed the considerallon ol a bounties of the Government, you mav 2f ' tetnm;ial preVerited bybim, some daysuny vor 0f testimony. The blue book Frim a. iiuaiber ot CUizens l liurKeiCan furnish vou with those whose name cSukV.VNorth-Carolina, renionstratittp; I j leoiou,, to defend any and every act Wirwt. the. ineasuie dl the removal of the 0r this or anv other Administration. It IP4iflic Beoosites from the Dank of the their vocatiori. It mav be. regardex! at flltntetl'States lutions came in a form so usual, and with al so unpretending, that he bad not ex- nr.ted thev jvould receive . more than a rjsUinjr notice. They had, how ever, elicit ed much debate, and had bees" assailed on various grounds j and especially 'that ttjey had," emanated from partisan zeal, and had been vindicated, it" not conceiv ed, by a disappointed political character. Something was said of pot house- politi cians," and ''miserable petitions." Mn M. paid he had stated, u pon the presenta tion of the rrotutions, t;at they had been aijlopied, as he had been informed, with out distinction of party, and that they might be regarded as embodying the seh itihients of a large majority of the intelli- 1 gnt anasuDstauUai neemen or inai one a o d pros pe ro u s, region o f No rt h -Ca ro I i n a. UK nau, since uiui siaiciirciu a- uiaur, availed himself sedulously of al! the means of information within his reach, arid he Vi ad" teen letters that morning ; and, the result had been to add-strength to his first impressions, in reference to the state of public sentimentin the mountain region of North-Carolina, and to enable him to stUte, with confidence,, that a similar sen timent prevaded a large majority of the entire State.- The resolutions did not, therefore, in his opinion, emanate from partisan feeling, and party prejndi.ee. but were the result of a strong sense, of the general inconvenience, not to say distress, brought upon that portion ot the country by ihe usurpation and abuse of power ou the part ot the kxeeutive Mr. 1. said his information deceived hi m I most grossly, i f, t h ro u gl i o u 1 1 h e w h ol e State of North-Carolina, the approach to unanimity in opposition to the -Ad minis tration u pon the, Pejsestioni is not wholly unparalleled upon any other great questiou emanating from an Executive of their own choree. ; The remari: in reference to asupposed, disappointed poiitiai character, he could not misuntlerstahd, and was compelled to, regard ita exceedingly unjust, and still I mot e ;unkind;fHe understood;it to refer tolas honorable and most excellent friend,, Mr. Carson, lately a member of the other House. He had hoped that his friend was so well known here, and so truly appre ciated, that no hand would be found to aim a shaft unkindly at him. It is true, the remark was accompanied with the ad mission that he was an honorable man, well; entitled -to all respect, but yet it sounded in his ears as harsh and unkind.. Mr. M. said he had known Mr. Carson lung and intimately, and he believed the estimate, he had formeaSjf him, was held i - t 1 1 i i i' t in common uv an wno Knew mm mat a man cf higher honor, purer principles, and a warmer heart, perhaps, 'does not live, and of whom iimay be said, -truly and einphaticatly, that he is without fear, atid without reproach. That he is wholly incapable o assailing this or ap v other Adniontrafon, for acts that his sound judgment doe& not disapprove. If there be any ground v for the 'imputation that theic resolutions emanated from mere pah i sail etforjts, we shall probably have evidence of it in another branch of Con gress. Let -us before we make too cer Tin of it, see what will be the vote of the u. ember representing that district. Mr. M. .said he knew that- honorable -member well ; he knew him to be a warm ly-aU4tliel iM'enjJ to the Administrationv ami tftdt ne voo Id regret the adoption by Ji oi any Hue otpul;cy, Irom which a head quarters as a part of their duty. Mr. Mavgvm rose, and said, Jhat hei i ne tens anu hnd, apeit-a toiler occaMon. moved til "o.iars, isnp iL u. rniatin nmin contractors, that deface ami blacken the iht: tfll.lp7 tu Pnahle the Senator Irom blue book, and that have contributed to Pennsylvania to proceed in the debate criP1jle the who e post oKcc establish; upon the principal question. TCeu.arKS ;-, a" "J V" r "V. having been made by several gentlemen, would be a rich equivalent for a go(.d which, in his judgment, required a spe- . ""v'u cific notice.- he sae that direction to the It is not to those wholiveby Government ) subject with the view of resuming Ihe con- pay, that I look lor public sentiment ; sider.ntiort ot it, at as early a period as """V "vy tile state of the business and convenience riarcier tne times, me more tney ouy for of the Senate would allow. No earlier their money. It is tm thepeople, the real rr-,rn hvin nffered. he .would naw people ; not ofnee holders or contractors : ! proceed to bestow that brief notice on the hut to the people, who have nothing to subject, which the remarks of gentlemen ask from the Government but justice and seemed necessarily to suggest. The reso- moderation and a wise economy, ,that I iook loir tne pouuc sentiment. i do not mean, said Mr; M. to ffonvey the idea, that there is no party in North-Carolina, that supports with z.eal and anxiety the whole course of the Administration in re ference to the depositee. I know full well there i,s sich a party ; s;nall I be lieve it to be ; but by fojrce of a severe drill antf exact discipline, it will be felt in all its evolutions, . and is by no means to be despised. A party animated by. a principle of ambUion, as active and al most as dangernus as poison, with its eye steadily fixed Upon the elevation of the Executive favorite, and its heart upon the loaves and ashes, and flesh pots,, and all those good things, that come tn the train of pjower. That party defends the vio lent and lawless seizure of the depositee, as it will continue to defend every act of the Administration, so long as there is a fair prospect that it will ride out in safe ty and in triumph the storm of the public indignation Nor do I mean to'say that there are not others, out of the pale of this party, ho nest and honorable men; who support this measure. I know thatihere are some in fluenced by strong prejudices against the Bank, or strong attachment to the Chief Magistrate, who are as ; incredulous of merit, on the part ot the former, as they are slow to admit error, on the part of the latter. But, sir, if I do not mistake the signs of the times, this party, active, indefatigable, and concentrated, as itTis . sustained, as it is, by thie countenance and patronage of the Federal Govern ment, will be beaten and overwhelmed by that great undisciplined corps of miii ta, the tree ami sovereign people. Sir, we arc unaccustomed to that political dis cipline by which, in other States, whole jcomipnunities change front at the word of jcommanJ, with the celerity and precision that a battalion may be wheeled in the ppen field. We are mere militia; we refuse the drill, and hold in contempt the political tactician. We have no central agency which kindly takes from the shoulders-of the people the burthens of self- overnment. Ve have no Junto ot pa triots who kindly assume the toils of 'Go vernment for the paltry equivalent of the U' vypntd be an organization without pow er a vjovernmeot witho'it subjects a mere, caput mortumri. with Tione so poor. as to do it reverence." ; As we have rio man, or-set of men, who control public opinion, at will, so I think no man, or set of men, can transfer, at will, popularity to another. I regard the idea that the suffrage offc North-Carolina can be transferred to the Executive favo rite, as deeply insulting to the intelligence and independence of our citizens. I know that the opinion is entertained, and warmly cherished, but I think it is founded in a profound misconception 61 the character of our people. Tiiey can not, they will not, be transferred (hey will judge and deckle for themselves wisely, I trust; independently, I-jain sure.' ' The people f that State, had borne rnnrh, they were less excitable than some of their more mercurial neighbors ; but tnere was a point beyond which the experiment now making upon them and the country "'could not be safely-carried. " .'It had been stated by his honorable colleague,, ami doubtless from hi conviction of its truth that he had no donbt Yhit "N'rrth-Cartrlina" wtiold always sustain the 'Administration ' that the opinions of the jieople,. republican a' they were, were decidedly against domes tic foes, as well as foreign enemies, and would sunnort the Croveroment airainst both." It became Mr. M. to speak with modest y in "regard to .his State, but of her virtue for consistency, and a steadfast ad herence to her principles, lw might speak, as he should onlv echo the voice of her whole history. He should then feel that hejiad assumed a weighty responsibility, to affirm of his State, that she would ai .ways support any man, r any adminis tration. lut he should feel that he risk- I do noticed nothing in alarming that she would be found steadily supporting her principles. She, in common with her sisters, was un der the. influence of that devotion to pub lic benefactors, which distinguished a ge nerous and honorable people ; she might occasionally err, under the influence of a generous enthusiasm, or temporary excite ment : but, in the lon.T run she would be iound ou the side of those great principles that had' marked every period ot her his- bold to nor the President and Congress together, have the shadow of right to raise money, by taxing th People, to lend eithertohis or their frierkls J nor have thev anv ris-ht to use monet, altef t s raUed, for their benefit w h betjellt nf thefr friends, ef ther for. pecuniary or political speculatioii -either oj-fciake 'JurtRflW ' or to mak Presidents-!,:AnU fet,' no! one can- shui his 'eyes to t-je fact thaLthf whole strug gle here, is "p take the 'public money from the place designated--by law, aJid to; give the use of tl to certain affiliated Banks, that must cpf necessity, be oiore or less controlled b?jr a political" part v. In tfie ayorite to the Presidency ? Ifow man would eliefe uqder this administration of their own chpce that those who io fact manage the system, regard the gratifica That SM JsJhe teirtopr, nf thel Cfcf Magistrate lam not sure. , B-ii Who "be lieves that the policy f the PreVidonf the previtUng oilicy;of th Admini'fri- uon or me anromon ot one man, as whol- j tion ?. Who does nf sec That1: a -certain' ly aboveany questions of public in forest I j great party, an), TaK barftarllioMii And yet, in the presence of the Senate. auo before the country, I declare it as my solemn conviction, that-such .is' the fact Sir, if the whole country could look in to this stupendous laboratory, within these ten miles square, and comprehend at a glance the complicated springs of action, how much of selfish ambition, how little of patriotism, bow much of mere merce - . worst period:, ot the Koman empire, the i nary Calculation- and see too, by Whosef imperial purple was put , up at auction by I hands and for whose interest the Govern mentis control ledit might bring an aw- the nijcton&fl guards God forbid that Mr. M. goiuif1 in'- isite qiies- we shall e'veMee the time in this couotrr when tra5ne.l political colnrU shall seizlb upon the public moneys to open the wa to the PresHency by corruption ; uhe tlie patronayie of the. "Government shall ba i . i' . i ii .'n r i . commneu vwin tne people's money, to bring into r,ner an Executive favorite.: I shall del'me, iitl to the orguufSnt upon' the, dep. tion. T. he tgument has been exhausted, and the jjfcrwxts, I do not Kay. the reasons, of Ihe. Ad nWiUstjral jtlrj ' XrthT m.ism7, have 'been' toteHt -'.linmh Hated. Tluitis my opinions? and such, I do not doubt, will lx tle opinion of the country. I' has ben said, that a' great. 'effort is muking to-. ut out of power particular men, and, lrtfl. tuem, t put out or to put down tl. principles of this Adminis- uauon, ami to uring., omers into power principles-- with pposi,e or dilVerent My views ivKye no: taken so wide a scopei Sly. object i'H ito check, if posib. bold and lawless usurpation, and to avert from the colintryVllie eviU consequent yion it to arrest (4ie deep--and" wide-spread dis- jtress so L.aintully experienced in some quarters, agal so fearfully anticipated in all. 0 ' ' What motive, asked Mr. M. can anv f ul tlay offreckoning to those whose hearts are now hardened against the distresses of ihe people. lnt, sir, the country will not se it. Men may not prove recreant to their trusts, but the whole extent of a buse and corruption wjll not, cannot, be realized. The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth, cannot be known. J5ut, sir, it is charged, ' that the object of the opposititMi is to pat out the men and jjrinciples of thi administration. ,T!wt is a serious charge, afthlematfxaTiHn tion. To put out the principles of this, iiviiiiiiiii i iiuuu . i Kiti ougin not to oe done, if th.se principles are sound, and conservative of the'ureat interests 6f the country. The principles of this admin istration! I have looked not iniiitentjvel v to the coarse of this administration fV several' years. I had supposed, until af ler the re-election of tiie President, that the tendency of those principles was con servative- It is true, that I was not en tirely sure that I precisely comprehended the views of thewnen in power. The South was laboring jind sinking under the Tariff system; our people looked with eagetne?s to any indication of relief, and supposed they aw it in the principles avowed bv the administration. It is certain, how gentleman Hive especially from his Slate,! ever, that by reason of the imperfection to throw himself into ,the mnks .of oppp- of language, or from some other cause, siiion to thti Administration ? The Ad - Pennsylvania regarded the views of the torv and none might be so. count upon her support, who were them selves untrue to those principles ; occa sional aberrations, or slight delinquen cies, she might generously overlook; but, depend upon it, that no man", or set o'l men, who habitually disregard her prin ciples, can safely count upon her support. That State had suffered as little of pe-f cuniary distress from the removal of the denosiies and the destruction of confi dence consequent irpon the violence and usurpation which marked the; whole pro cedure, as perhaps any other on the At lantic border. Perhaps, from circum stances peculiar to t erself, she had suf- fered less than any other certainly much less than her sister States to the North and East. The whole amount of debt in that State, foreign and domestic, was perhaps much smaller than it had been for several years, and yet, by reason of the gradual winding up of the business of all the local il iiiks there had been a sort of stricture, not to say uneasiness, in money matters. 'I he shock given to pub lic confidence the entire uncertainty as to the future had unquestionably increas ed that uneasiness, 'he evils of that act were moving apace, atid we.re pervading every part of the Interior, and must be felt with more or less severity. But the. opposition of that State, to this measure, did not arise from a feeling of distrss for that opposition existed before the con sequences of the measure were felt at all -but it rested upo.n a deep sense of vio lated law. the startling pretensions of nnwer. and flio mnivife.st tendenc.v to the. ,w..r.T . . J . ' 1 .,!..'.... .r oil r..ii)fi'-4n tlio linrkilc ikf tirt I tl(- I nil I II l IUJ I 1 All tf til WE. IIIIIIM9 VI IFIH. I 4 it Li.i :? .... i.;i,i- LmkiJiniiiu to nieJ iiiitli. lie icaiucu it as iOq'kj iwihjiuuic to his State, that she was moved, not by imnistratioyas now tn its second term and tt must livefjout the time for which it is elected a ? longer continuance of it un der the prt?ent Chief Magistrate is not contemplate by any one. What motive then, can o&e have, causelessly and, in- deed, u-niesunder the influence ofa stem necessity place himself - i n tlje op position ? '$q motive can be assigned. On thjfdoi rary, every consideration of prudence, c? -personal, advancement, or individual .lase, conspire to recommend that he .should- take .thedirection of the times,, and l'at ' gently down upon the current of ,v fie Pr.e'sident's popularity. r In the St&ti. from which he came, "that popularity pas known to have been great. It was a cor: lid e nee given to Jym sudden ly, but voluntarily. If recent event! have deeplyalarined; not to say shaken that confidence, yet. t mav supnse l still to be strong; opposition,; .therefore, will necessarily Ivave to encounter precon ceived partialities,. and to brook the mis representations. and calumnies ofaser vi le auu ueraueo press a press, in its ramincatiow, penetrating every portion of -tlriUed and tliscip- the Coil federacv movd by an- finpuhe from tin centre aud cat u mn' ti ve denunciations. ' Des regar President as rtot unfavorable to her favo rite system ; while in the South, we took go'id heart from en couragiag intimations, aud supported with energy and zeal the present Chief Magistrate, believing, as we did, that he was with us in feeling; and principle. The history of subsequent tunes, may tell how deep, were the delu sions ol a connding people. I lie scenes ol the last winter, if thev shall evier be truly pourtrayed, will exhibit in vivid co lors, the deep and deliberate betrayal of (he trusting South. The principles of this administration! As far as'L know, and I make the decla ration under a full sense of responsibility, this administration has put forward no principle as a test principle, as a party principle, except the principles of Elec tions and of office. The administration came into power as a reforming adminis tration, to cut down abuses,, lop off ex crescences, restore economy, and bring back the Government to a sound, simple and healthful action. Ihe thp President and his CftUfwtii a1t Were. in the palms of their hands ? t Who does not see that the pd5cy of that pnrtyis eminenfly that ot noncommittal ? that it watches the currents: of public opinion,' and embrks with an f ye! smgljif to the "b jects of personal amittotV? that the I fects of sagacity are sought the -supplier! by after thoughts, ort of tin mrntg, (par don the word, it lowne-s U n .level, " with tlie policy it i;intendertoim!lcaf e.) hy stnr.ly applications to the paVsTdns anil gullibility of the- rmbtic ? ' ? ' Sir, in this question of th'xteprfsites. their ssgacltv hn depl? (aileilthem. To rifle the fe;inkf llie"OeposU WtiUr charges deeply affecting , its purity, Pmk, which is supposed to be so vvery unpopular and by a Presbfent so stro-ig lpopularityi was supposed to be the ea siest thing in the world, and in th- deep tVnanriml wisdinn of tjie Executive, ad vi-- rstoirt ntftfe aV fe w ' mi lli&ral l l.tis ' ittu dih; suie oi iue srrtet to tiie Otiier, ilid rrotiabstrac.t the money; from the Coo n try,and therefore could produce no 'diffi culty. ;Financial sages;! Wise mnny ; chancers! It never occ?Jfrd to thetn that the country could doubt their wUdon or that the country would feel the aligSt est shoGk in public corlldence. Thei affiliated and favorite Banks, would us -these moneys in a way to refresh the whole pai ty, and sustain it, and draw. to its support as. many hungry retainers 09 might be necessary to bear into ptJwer the - lavorne.; " - . Iiut the power behind the th rone, 'great er than the throne itself, will begin to find that it has been a litfl too bold 4 that the peoplejiave yet a strong --sense ol liberfy, and that the popularity of nb mati can bear every thine." The'mahagera will find that, they cannot get along with the present piOicy ; that they will be. un horsed; that the. country will not consent to undergo so in;uch distress and suife ribs -merely to try an " experiment. They' mus,t retrace they canttot go on--ot they will die in tfepir tackJ m .TRe. 1reopl . hay e borne u ch $ tlieyj may,- yet 'iear more ; but let itb?ir oppressors bftwareT . driving this experiment too far. ' " Mr. M. said; he did not believe that in ' any country, where laws were known and acted upon, a people had ever, in a time1, of profound peace, been so suddenly thrown, by the will of one man, frema sta of the highest prosperity into one of i wide-spread and general' iistres If ' these calamities had been inflicted by dis ease, by famine, or by the' elements, men's minds would be brought -.to bear them with calmness and philosophy. Bat when inflicted through mere wantonness or vindictiveness, or for the accomplish ment of schemes of avarice or ambition,1. a free people could not be exempt from a vir.cp ieiingoi uneasinesjianujuctnteiH tions before the country were tariff, in ternal improvement,, and economy,? and abuse of executive patronage. 1 ameboid to sav, that not a single pledge, either ex- a r'ady organ of every slandef press or implied, by the opponents of the ihu ; and a sure echo of Execul late and friends of the present adminis- has been redeemed. great ques- nor long restrained froiu tho-exnression of irot every one ; tration, This is a eeandfeejjhat when the allurements and;i strong declaration, and yet 1 feel pre blandihm'eJ?ts of power shall fail of their object whi-h fealty shall not be secured by flattery!:; reward, or the hope of. re ward that the fears or the weakness: of the publri man are sought to be acted on4' the terrorism of denunciation ? . Docs not every one see that independence! A .ill any one rise in his place and deny and manliniJisarenot the virtuesrequired? That submission to the-drill is exacted ? pared, wnen invited to tne trial, to prove it before the country. The only great principle, until this of the rleposites, whiph the friends of the ad a deep indignation. Air. M. moved je reference of the memorial. T Mr. BnawT rose and said, that he had hoped, after the discussion which this subject lisul already undergone in tha Senate.: and from the psriod of time which haul elapsed since that discussion, that it would not have again been revived-: He exprcsse;! his rejrret that it should Attain have become necessary for him to claim any mcrre of the firnp and atfentioti of the. Senate than had already been extended to Kitrt, on this onef'ion : hut some of the remarks which had fallen from his honorable colleajrne:, (MrMan- ministration were required to support, was ! trurn,) had imposed on- him the necessity ofmakiAgf tlie principle of olhce. Is the fact not so ?; ate w.o.eryai ions m reply. it and give the exception ? You be tariff' or anti-tariff, internal improve nngiit That he mot go- the whole length in ad- ment or anti-internal improvement, for or vancing tha4 great primary object of ihelagainst economy, Bank or anti-Bank, 'ST ' I .- V 1 t ,1 i. lT I. 1 r- aim yet a goon jacKSon man, a member ot the political Church, in full communion. managers t, in. Executfte people's money only We recognize no organizations, uTTknown to the Constitu tion, to ride and rule over the laws ; to manufacture public opinion ; to order and to club the wits of dishonest; men ; to Seize upon the Government and plunder a colliding community. - - ir, we have seen in the history of other States, and great States too, that bail men have established regencies, self-constitu-ted, ambitious, and unprjneipjed, which, by means of perfect organization, com prehending every county, aniLevery town ship of every county, controlled public Opinion, subdued all spirit of resistance, krnd acting in phalanx, and by concert, se cured an echo from every bi scan: even the imost-duninutive, to the expressed will of the central . Junto, illustrious talent. ripe experience, & well-tried patriotism, must fair-(n to the ranks, bow to the-cea tral powet; and wheel at the word ofcotn mand, or be proscribed by the ruthless despotism.: Assort of political Procras reati bed talent and worth jgo for noth ing, i Exac (liicipline and perfect obe lience, ;mc only tests ol excellence, i Sir, WeiaVe ho such regency,! wo can have none. It cannu live among us in power. jit wou'.d live only in tloggerel or in pai- and law-abiding State election ot tlve successor favorite o'r make up his e denunciations of the of- this District, re-echoed, as ate, -tiy that portion ot the press which as vhas never faltered in defend ing all the iicts of power? phaticaily a Iawrloving4 . Sir, it iss a sl.ghtmatter to take a po itate. Not the Worship- ?tioii hercainsUhe acta of this Admin istration ; jgrno it is leareo, mat tne over ficial organV) r..i;.. they aie, lriei ue mr v cunsiut-LiiiiiMi?. uutur u ictun i . - . of justice, and her love and veneration for the Constitution and the laws. North Carolina was em per of idols and the . devotee of power but as firm to resist usurpations on the part of power, as ready to yield obedience to rightful authority. . - Nothing (said Mr, M.) indicates more clearly the unsoundness of the times than the true character of this controversy. Strip it of all extraneous matter of the mystification of language, and remove the ..- .i . l . ' 'a. I ill : i ruDuisn mat encumoecs'ic aim uns wnoie deposite question i acontest for the use of the public money for the. purposes of rain to make interest out of it. It is a contest for the use of it after it leaves the pockets of the People and beoft it is dis bursed in the public service as if this Government has any right to take money from the pockets of the people, before it is needed, Jo lend either to partisan Hanks or political partisan.. The law" jdaoes this money in the!Uiited Slates Bank, mainly for safe fcbepin, and fqr a safe and easy transmission to the iilif ferent points of .the country where it-is needed for the public service. The great object is safety. Nether the President, prudence ' timidity of public servants, j hold any principles in; common; but if up too often pflfmit the outrages of power tofon a nomination to a land Office or a for pass withoiU l buke rather than incur the known penalties of resisting them. Sirj tlmtjands and tens of thousands of our hones tjnd industriousxitizensare in; a state of pHifound ignorance of the enor mous, the ffonstrous abuses and corrup tions of th?J Government. 1 They live too far from u :l have feared, to guard it ef fectually a-yjainst abuse. The public eye is not sufficiently turrted upon the Govern ment exce it for its favors & its patronage. The guard Umship is defective is certain ly inefficient; That m,an who should tun derta"k,e jli'sGlose to the public eyerthe enormons sibus.es of the present tiiqe, would be enouiiced as a 'ca'uinniatorv liste'd.-toilh"-utwrvHncrelui'ty, orkre- so long as yiMi would , vote for aUjmmina tions to office, and support the eleciionsi of those who would sustain all the vfiews of the Executive in relation to office. Upon these great national questionssome of which almost shook this Confederacy to its deepest foundations, the friends "of the Administration were not reauired to j - Uow nmmlotany const irutmts could be made to se?-, as cieariVjas l mum l see it, that the public;wal the geal inter ests of the Country, are held by those vho practic'ally control tho Government, as wUcm! v subordinate to the elevati wi of their eign mission,' or any subordinate situation upon which the Executive had set his heart for the accommodation, of his friend J one should venture toyexpress his dissent, wo betide the presumptuous act, he might look out for the flaming sword of ExVcu tive vengeance, or prepare for the deep denunciations of a profligate Press, j Sir, this Administration has had no fix ed pr?hciptes, upon wjiich it has steadily acted upon any of these groat ubjecfs.--Its strength has mainly consisted iir the keeping of its views of policy, eithejiun i f? i .i . .i - uenneoor tnrown into-tne qarK. tin a word its highest policy hasvibeen toliave no settled policy. To keep every thiqg openr, everjjthing unsettled, to Jean as the xigeincy . might require,either to the North ir to the Southto make'the most of-eve- rv interest, by playing off. against -each Mr. B. said, he would takej occasion, before ho proceedal furth er in bis remark, to correct a inistakcy no doubt unintentional, into which hia collcaafuc had fallen, in the course cfthq remarks which be had r just made, in attributing to him an expression, when ' this subject was some time ago under ;4iusion which he had never uJed, arid altogether ucIaTned ( an expression which respect, "boUVor himself and the State which he in paltt represented, would hard prevented hh making. " V " ' lie, Mr. Bj did not say, upon the occasion Referred to, tlrat the State of IVorth-CaroUna " would almay susttun the Administration," but he had taken occw- Kion - to say, that he himself had ruf doubt that NorjthipiaroBna would suctaht'the Adnrinistration which etpression he had Used in reference to thd . great question which was now agitating the country, and which had grown out of the iSahval of foe poir He Deposites. Here, Mr, 'Mmri asked leave to explntri, and the floor having been yielded him. ho read from the National IntpUigencer that paftof th speech of Mr. B. as reported in that paper, to which he hnd referred Mr. Bsowir rdsunied, and aai, that the expression attributed to lum, fa the report of his remarks in the tptelligcRccr, which puer, he -would say, had genera fly treated fiirrr with feuraess and jusdee in reporting' lite rcruadta, wag- one which had not been vteed by him. He" iscldonj troubli himwff to revitw tlie notes of any pf ' &c reportenv befcrro their pnljfication, as to any thin? which be said here in debate. " He bdd looted ovef Ids remark very hastily, as vch by the fleporter of Hps tntelli- - encer, l)efore; they were published CI that pt per, -hut the error which fie alluded U had escaped Ha obrwjvatioa. The report -f h.a rermrluf, as. pnoTWi- - other thelifferent sections to efi'ectihaiv monv ami concert in nothing save in the elections, have been eminently charaibter- t&lic o; tne present AdmiuistratiMn. j . j ed in the CIo!xi of tho 15tb ; February, gave accurate. i'.i.. .1 ' -Li ! .Y.:u i aUudcid toJ Mr. B said,haf e tad ventqifHl toex- prcsvlhe opinion, that tIw;8Wteof lioruvCaroUna '.vottw sustain inu Asmuusrrauon.on, uui "axjcsuori, wliich in Its issvrrt, he jpy(le)W0;'ffolveil'' v n-at priuciplcs of onstitiJcfiJir'. scrva'ion of our fwe instits, i IriiryitrpBi .which had dbtinguisticil r'iiaMti political sirug'les wlnehhad at'dlSnnrnt pmicr'C thei, and ha stiit Uiieved, tiat there ijTjS'a'iSr"! jdettfitBOObd ?piiitof putriotifm in m;itttti&i& 4 .. i . ... -t -A -:':;.i - - 4 ',1 ! V: M A 1